Difference between revisions of "2015-09-23 global"
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[[Category:Expedition planning]] | [[Category:Expedition planning]] |
Revision as of 15:09, 14 June 2016
Globalhash on Wed 23 Sep 2015: |
Location
Just 70 miles south of the geographic North Pole. 900 miles directly north from the Russian island and nuclear testing zone of Novaya Zemlya.
This looks like it could be near some research stations - or maybe not? I'm not sure. Google Maps won't plot it properly as the Mercator projection it uses distorts to infinity near the poles. Intrigued to see just how close to the North Pole 89deg N actually is. --SpiritofMaurice (talk) 11:01, 22 September 2015 (EDT)
- You can easily work out how close to the pole it is. All graticules are the same height (i.e. distance north-south); it's just the width (west-east) that differs as you move from one latitude to another. The pole-to-pole (meridional) circumference of the Earth is 40008 km, so with 360 graticules on the way round, each is 111.133 km tall. So a geohash at 88.99438 degrees north is (90 - 88.99438) * 111.133 = 111.758 km from the pole. — Benjw {talk} 11:38, 22 September 2015 (EDT)
- OK, after firing up Google Earth this makes a lot more sense. It's very close to the North Pole! Will anyone be this far North in the Arctic at this time of year? If any researchers etc. are within 100 miles of the pole, it'd be amazing if they had a crack at this. See the gallery for my distance screenshots.
- Two Panoramio photos were taken within sixteen miles of this point and give a good idea of the terrain: 1, sea ice; 2, diving --SpiritofMaurice (talk) 11:49, 22 September 2015 (EDT)
Participants
Plans
Expedition
Tracklog
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Achievements